<p>she swallowed the sea to keep her cells alive, my mother, her body of ocean the heavy ocean underneath her skin, and when she opens the lids of her eyes, it spills from the black pools there inside the space of looking my mother nearly drowns in her own self she cries instead of […]</p>
she swallowed the sea to keep her cells alive,
my mother,
her body of ocean
the heavy ocean underneath her skin, and when
she opens the lids of her eyes, it spills
from the black pools there inside the space of looking
my mother nearly drowns in her own self
she cries instead of seeing and
black waters choke her even as she tries – even as she tries
to swallow them back inside
once, I saw an orange fish slip
over the edge of an ocular pool;
it landed with a wet flesh sound on the wooden floors
and drowned in the stuff that I keep breathing
we only ate the fish because we were hungry, see
it’s hard to find a job when you are drowning out of water
I am not sure if eating the fish was at all like eating my mother
or if the fish,
inside my body,
will start demanding water
to clarify;
I didn’t want an ocean for a mother. I wanted a person –
a person in the right shape of a person
to remind me that the shadows do not have flesh and bones
like people do
I said that eyes were not for fish and sadnesses to fall out of
and bodies were flesh and should not bleed salt water
she said
my daughter, drowning and living are synonymous things.
it was my first lesson in evading happiness
now, I have rubbed myself dry, and if not, St Kilda Beach
isn’t a real ocean
anyway.
since my life of aridness, I have begun to expect
that one day I will see her
through the window of a fish tank
with the slits of gills on the sides of her face,
learning how to breathe
meanwhile, a fish still swims inside my watery ribcage;
the reason why I am so susceptible
to pneumonia and sadness
in winter
erica